Political cognition helps explain social class divides: Two dimensions of candidate impressions, group stereotypes, and meritocracy beliefs

被引:20
作者
Fiske, Susan T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Princeton Univ, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA
关键词
Political cognition; Stereotypes; Class; Status; Resentment; RACIAL STEREOTYPES; COMPETENCE; GENDER; WARMTH; FACE; BIAS; IMMIGRANTS; PERCEPTION; JUDGMENT; EMOTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.cognition.2018.11.007
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Political cognitions-particularly impressions and stereotypes along two fundamental dimensions of social evaluations-play some role in explaining social class divides and accompanying resentments. First, the Big Two dimensions (warmth/communion and competence/agency) describe candidate perception, person perception, and group stereotypes. In particular, the stereotype content model and related perspectives show social-class stereotypes depicting elites as competent but cold and lower-income groups as incompetent but warm. This trade-off justifies the system as meritocractic, because elites' stereotypic competence supports their status based on deservingness. Nevertheless, varied evidence (from social psychology, political science, and sociology) indicates common beliefs that support cross-class resentments: In particular, many citizens express political resentment both downward (toward cheats) and upward (toward elites). In this context, backlash against the system results. Anticipated by systematic theories, these political cognitions (impressions, stereotypes, beliefs) help explain the populist and nativist resentments in current political discourse; all support polarized, dysfunctional politics.
引用
收藏
页码:108 / 115
页数:8
相关论文
共 75 条
  • [1] Crowding Out Culture: Scandinavians and Americans Agree on Social Welfare in the Face of Deservingness Cues
    Aaroe, Lene
    Petersen, Michael Bang
    [J]. JOURNAL OF POLITICS, 2014, 76 (03) : 684 - 697
  • [2] Abele A, 2018, NAVIGATING SOC UNPUB
  • [3] Communal and Agentic Content in Social Cognition: A Dual Perspective Model
    Abele, Andrea E.
    Wojciszke, Bogdan
    [J]. ADVANCES IN EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, VOL 50, 2014, 50 : 195 - 255
  • [4] AFFECTIVE AND SEMANTIC COMPONENTS IN POLITICAL PERSON PERCEPTION
    ABELSON, RP
    KINDER, DR
    PETERS, MD
    FISKE, ST
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1982, 42 (04) : 619 - 630
  • [5] Allport G., 1954, Becoming
  • [6] [Anonymous], 2017, PUBL TRUST GOV 1958
  • [7] Economic performance and presidential trait evaluations: A longitudinal analysis
    Argyle, Lisa P.
    Arrajj, Marcus
    Covich, Skylar
    Garay, E. G.
    Gottlieb, Julian
    Hodges, Heather E.
    Smith, Eric R. A. N.
    [J]. ELECTORAL STUDIES, 2016, 43 : 52 - 62
  • [8] FORMING IMPRESSIONS OF PERSONALITY
    ASCH, SE
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1946, 41 (03): : 258 - 290
  • [9] Predicting political elections from rapid and unreflective face judgments
    Ballew, Charles C., II
    Todorov, Alexander
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2007, 104 (46) : 17948 - 17953
  • [10] Emotional Substrates of White Racial Attitudes
    Banks, Antoine J.
    Valentino, Nicholas A.
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, 2012, 56 (02) : 286 - 297